
Ancient Philosophy
Saint Augustine
by Garry Wills(1999)
A brief, elegant portrait of Augustine's life and ideas, written for general readers as part of the Penguin Lives series.
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Episodes featuring this book

Why Does Evil Exist If God Is Good?
Augustine of Hippo asked why we do what we know is wrong, why nothing ever satisfies us, and where evil comes from if God is good. This episode tells the complete story of the philosopher who shaped Western thought more profoundly than almost any other figure. It follows Augustine from his African childhood to the streets of Carthage, through nine years with the Manichaeans, to the garden in Milan where everything changed. The episode explores his revolutionary ideas: evil as the absence of good, the will divided against itself, time existing only in the mind, memory as a palace larger than the world, grace that breaks chains human effort cannot loosen, and the two cities built on two loves that have been at war since the beginning of history. It also confronts the difficult dimensions of his legacy, including his teachings on predestination, original sin, and the endorsement of coercion against religious dissenters.

Life Is Suffering | Buddha's Complete Philosophy
There is a story that begins with a man who had everything, and who walked away from all of it on a single night. Fall asleep to the complete philosophy of the Buddha. Twenty-five centuries ago, a prince in the foothills of the Himalayas left three palaces, a wife, and a newborn son because he had seen three things on a road that made the comfort of his life intolerable. Six years later, sitting under a fig tree in what is now northern India, he claimed to have understood something that no accumulation of pleasure could reach, and he spent the next forty-five years explaining it to anyone who would listen. Over the next two and a half hours, we walk through ten chapters of his life and his thought, from the diagnosis that life is suffering, through the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path, into the radical doctrines of no-self and impermanence, through the twelve links of dependent origination, and out into a comparison with Heraclitus, Hume, and Schopenhauer. This is not a devotional video. It is a careful, philosophical reading of the Buddha as one of the great systematic thinkers of any civilization, a physician of the mind whose prescription can still be tested today. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts.

What Did Dostoevsky Actually Believe About God?
Hell is not punishment from God. It is the inability to love. This three-hour episode traces the Orthodox Christian tradition that shaped everything Dostoevsky ever wrote, from Isaac the Syrian and Maximus the Confessor to Gregory of Nyssa and the hesychast monks. What does it mean that sin is not a crime requiring penalty but a sickness requiring healing? That salvation is not a transaction but a transformation of the whole person? These are the questions buried inside The Brothers Karamazov, The Idiot, and Crime and Punishment. This episode is a companion to our earlier Dostoevsky exploration. Where that episode examined his ideas through a philosophical and psychological lens, this one traces them to their source: kenosis, theosis, apophatic theology, prelest, and sobornost.

On Plato and the Cave You Never Left
What if everything you've ever seen, touched, or believed was just a shadow on a wall? Fall asleep to the complete philosophy of Plato, the thinker who shaped Western civilization for over 2,500 years. This three-hour episode traces Plato's thought from its origins in the death of Socrates through the Theory of Forms, the Allegory of the Cave, the vision of the philosopher king in The Republic, the epistemology of recollection, Diotima's ladder of love in the Symposium, and the arguments for the immortality of the soul in the Phaedo. It also examines the political philosophy of The Republic, its controversial vision of a just society governed by those who have seen the Good, and the late dialogues where Plato turned a critical eye on his own theory of Forms.

Can Mathematics Explain Reality?
Around 600 BCE, on the island of Samos, a man was born whose ideas would echo through mathematics, music, and mysticism for over two thousand years. Pythagoras left almost nothing in writing, and the boundary between the historical figure and the legend built around him remains impossible to draw with certainty. This episode traces what we can reconstruct: his travels through Egypt and Babylon, the secretive community he founded at Croton, the discovery that musical harmony follows mathematical ratios, and the doctrine of the transmigration of souls. We examine the Pythagorean way of life, the famous theorem and its deeper significance, the concept of cosmic harmony, and the violent end of the brotherhood. Pythagoras believed the universe was built on number, and that understanding its structure was a path to the divine.

Beauty Will Save The World
Fyodor Dostoevsky spent four years in a Siberian labor camp and emerged convinced that human beings are not rational creatures who occasionally act irrationally, but irrational creatures who occasionally manage reason. This three-hour episode traces his life and philosophy through Crime and Punishment, Notes from Underground, The Idiot, Demons, and The Brothers Karamazov. We examine the underground man's revolt against the crystal palace of rationalism, Raskolnikov's theory of the extraordinary individual and its collapse, the problem of suffering in a world that might have no God, Ivan Karamazov's rebellion and the Grand Inquisitor, and Dostoevsky's insistence that freedom, even the freedom to suffer, is what makes us human. His novels do not argue positions. They stage collisions between ideas and watch what survives.